Complete Project Gutenberg John Galsworthy Works eBook

“Sane as you or me,” said the doctor.
“A little pedantic in his way of expressing
himself, but quite all there, really.”

“Did his dog bite you?” muttered the nephew.
“No,” said the doctor absently. “I
wish to heaven everyone held his views. So long.
I must be getting on.” And they parted.

But Mr. Lavender, after pacing the room six times,
had sat down again in his chair, with a cold feeling
in the pit of his stomach, such as other men feel
on mornings after a debauch.

XIII

ADDRESSES SOME SOLDIERS ON THEIR FUTURE

On pleasant afternoons Mr. Lavender would often take
his seat on one of the benches which adorned the Spaniard’s
Road to enjoy the beams of the sun and the towers
of the City confused in smoky distance. And strolling
forth with Blink on the afternoon of the day on which
the doctor had come to see him he sat down to read
a periodical, which enjoined on everyone the necessity
of taking the utmost interest in soldiers disabled
by the war. “Yes,” he thought, “it
is indeed our duty to force them, no matter what their
disablements, to continue and surpass the heroism they
displayed out there, and become superior to what they
once were.” And it seemed to him a distinct
dispensation of Providence when the rest of his bench
was suddenly occupied by three soldiers in the blue
garments and red ties of hospital life. They
had been sitting there for some minutes, divided by
the iron bars necessary to the morals of the neighbourhood,
while Mr. Lavender cudgelled his brains for an easy
and natural method of approach, before Blink supplied
the necessary avenue by taking her stand before a
soldier and looking up into his eye.

“Lord!” said the one thus accosted, “what
a fyce! Look at her moustache! Well, cocky,
‘oo are you starin’ at?”

“My dog,” said Mr. Lavender, perceiving
his chance, “has an eye for the strange and
beautiful.

“Wow said the soldier, whose face was bandaged,
she’ll get it ’ere, won’t she?”

Encouraged by the smiles of the soldier and his comrades,
Mr. Lavender went on in the most natural voice he
could assume.

“I’m sure you appreciate, my friends,
the enormous importance of your own futures?”

The three soldiers, whose faces were all bandaged,
looked as surprised as they could between them, and
did not answer. Mr. Lavender went on, dropping
unconsciously into the diction of the article he had
been reading: “We are now at the turning-point
of the ways, and not a moment is to be lost in impressing
on the disabled man the paramount necessity of becoming
again the captain of his soul. He who was a hero
in the field must again lead us in those qualities
of enterprise and endurance which have made him the
admiration of the world.”